| dc.description.abstract |
Exchange rate dynamics constitute a fundamental channel through which macroeconomic
policies transmit their effects, with fluctuations being determined not just by direct
policy interventions but also by structural factors including relative price movements
(Cheikh and Louhichi, 2016; M. P. Taylor, 2006), dominant currency pricing practices
(Gopinath, Boz, et al., 2020), and cross-country interest rate differentials (Aron et al.,
2014). These complex interactions generate several economically significant phenomena,
most notably strategic complementarities in pricing behavior among firms (Mallick and
Marques, 2008) and heterogeneous degrees of exchange rate pass-through (ERPT) across
sectors and countries (Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Michael M Knetter, 1997).
Building on John B Taylor (2000)’s seminal hypothesis that credible low-inflationary
regimes can substantially moderate ERPT by anchoring inflation expectations and
reducing the frequency of price adjustments, this study provides a focused examination
of India’s experience following its 2016 transition towards flexible inflation-targeting
(FIT) framework. Our analysis seeks to determine whether this institutional shift
toward a rules-based, transparent monetary policy regime has indeed contributed to lower
pass-through elasticities by altering inflation persistence patterns and modifying firms’
pricing strategies (Bailliu, Bouakez, et al., 2004; Michael B Devereux and Engel, 2001).
The Indian case offers particularly valuable insights given the country’s status as a large,
structurally complex emerging market economy that has experienced significant exchange
rate volatility while implementing inflation targeting. Our findings contribute to ongoing
theoretical debates about the ERPT-monetary policy nexus, particularly regarding how
institutional frameworks shape price dynamics. The study also yields practical policy
lessons for other inflation-targeting emerging markets confronting similar challenges of
managing external shocks and maintaining price stability amid global financial uncertainty.
This thesis investigates the dynamics of ERPT and its implications for monetary
policy in India’s under its inflation-targeting regime. Specifically, the study delves into four
broad perspectives to unpack ERPT’s complexities: First, we examine monetary policy
efficiency under FIT, identifying optimal policy rules for macroeconomic stability while
analyzing ERPT during policy transitions through a structural macroeconomic model.
Second, employing a Markov-switching framework, we assess asymmetric ERPT across
pre and post-inflation targeting periods, revealing regime-dependent pass-through effects.
Third, we investigate how terms of trade and monetary policy type jointly determine
ERPT degrees, analyzing the interaction between external shocks and domestic policy
frameworks. Finally, we explore how market structure, characterized by varying pricing
power, market imperfections, and exogenous interventions, shapes ERPT patterns while
linking exchange rate movements to demand elasticities. Through this multidimensional
approach, the study provides policy-relevant insights for enhancing monetary policy
effectiveness in emerging markets, with particular emphasis on managing exchange rate
dynamics within India’s macroeconomic stabilization framework. |
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